The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 23, 1945, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE NEBRASKAN
Friday, March 23, 1945
Jul Tkbha&luuv
titer ...
Maoaflnr
Xawa Kiit
rOBTT-TOUKTB TSA
EDITORIAL fiTArr
Harall W. Ailmti
UUn LeM Jean GUtfelty, Betty Laa Ba.too
r Janet Mhi. Phyllis leafardaa, Mary Alio
uwMt, aalrnr jcoKina.
Sparta Ed It a Chick f?lrton
Saeietr loiter Batty Kin
BUSINESS STAFF
Baalaeat Manager ,, ,, Mlldrea' Enrstrom
Aaaiatant Baatneaa Manaicr. ...Larraiaa Abraauaa. Shirler Stoaea
Circalatlan Manarer Janet Hutchinaaa
A New Leaf?
University coeds Wednesday elected new AWS officers
and Board members to administer women s government on
the campus for the coming year.
With the election of a new AWS administration, coeds
on the campus are naturally asking certain questions: Just
what policies will these new officers and Board members
follow? Will they continue the present policies of the AWS,
policies which have made that organization a common tar
get of censure and criticism by women students? Or will
they adopt new policies more in accord witn tne principles
of democratic government? In short, will they or will they
not at long last give UN coeds true self-government?
Time alone can answer these questions. Undoubtedly
the new AWS administration itself does not yet know with
any degree of defmiteness what its policies will be. But as
it formulates its policies, as it determines what type of gov
ernment it will give women students during the coming
year, the new administration might well take into serious
consideration some of the often-heard criticisms of the
AWS, criticisms voiced by coeds every day. Chief among
coeds' complaints are these:
That the AWS administration is all too often merely
LETTERIP
a tool of higher authorities, that its yields too often to
pressure brought to bear from above.
"That manu AWQ rorvnlatirmc ara cnnerfliiniic nr en
tangle coeds in needless "red tape. (The necessity of ob- campus personality Donaldine,
Dear Students:
We of the AWGWAN staff have patiently
suffered while the members of that ais
reputable ex-daily, the Nebraskan, have
slanrtprprt ns issufl after issue. TheV aC-
cused us of crowding them out of their of
fice, while the truth is. as everyone knows,
that the office reallv belones to tne
AWGWAN. The Nebraskan has said that we
of the AWGWAN have stolen rulers and
writers. They said that we were asleep when
an original AWGANER returned.
All of this we bore with our long-suffer
inc tranauilitv. But at last the time has
come for us to speak. The Nebraskan has
tned to force us out of our office by iiooa
ing the place. This is the last straw! All we
can do now is to reveal the awiui trutn
about the Nebraskan. They have been
guilty of a dreadful act of deceit
It pains us to reveal this to the unsus
pecting students of the University of Ne
braska, but There is no such person as
Les Glotfelty. Such a person does not exist.
True, the Nebraskan staff did snatch a
passing gypsy to assume that name, to
stride about the campus and to just ac-
casionally attend classes, but the existence
of a real Les Glotfelty is pure fiction. You
ask who writes the infamous column at
tributed to this person? The answer is, as
you probably have suspected, that it is
written by none other than that infamous
vealed in its true light, we trust that the
intelligent students of this campus will stop
reading that meaningless type-setting ex
ercise and confine their literary pursuits to
that superb, incomparable humor magazine,
The AWGWAN.
BILL MILLER.
taining signed "special permission" cards for late hours
is one often-cited example.)
That there should be some division of powers in the
administration of the AWS, that a single board should
not exercise legislative, administrative and judicial pow
ers over all women students.
That the AWS does not fulfill its stated purpose: to
represent the will of a majority of women students on
the campus.
That the coeds themselves do not have sufficient
voice in the actions and policies o fthe AWS.
With these criticisms to guide them, members of the
news AWS administration have the opportunity to give
women students truly democratic self-government. How
well they use that opportunity remains to be seen.
Now that the Nebraskan has been re-
TO THE STUDENTS:
Is the war over? Has the miniature Peace
Conference settled everything? Are we
completely free from all war-time obliga
tions?
From the spirit of UN coeds the above
seems true! The organized houses took a
weekly count of the war-work hours. All
coeds eagerly delved into such work as
surgical dressings, tin-can squashing, and
Nebraskans for service-men.
But, recently all of this has been dropped.
UN has turned traitor! Not one of the many
volunteers has squashed a single tin-can
in the Union kitchen during the past three
weeks. Of the forty-five who are supposedly
'Rag-Tag " workers, four appeared Tuesday
night. War Stamp sales have steadily fallen,
until, at present our sales are equsl to those
of any city grade school.
Coeds, WE ARE STILL AT WAR, even
in Nebraska where it is spring; where we
have a new crop of convertibles; where we
have a few returned boys!
AH houses are again checking on war
work hours. Redemption is easy: Buy War
Stamps! Squash tin cans! Report to com
plete the unfinished mailing of the service
man's paper this coming Tuesday night!
There are many ways of getting that weekly
three hours.
Marilyn Adler.
March Alumnus
Issue Features
Peace Meeting
The March issue of the Ne
braska Alumnus came out this
week featuring the Experimental
Peace Conference, with a picture
of Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen Rohde,
university alumna and guest
speaker at the first plenary ses
sion, and Barbara Stahl, vice
chairman of the planning com
mittee.
A complete program of the ex
perimental conference will go to
alumni through the magazine,
with pictures of Vice-chairman
Gerry McKinsey, shots of the first
plenary sessions, Mrs. Ruth Bryan
Owen Rohde and Herbert Brow
nell, jr., chairman of the national
republican committee and speaker
at the second plenary session.
Article on Mexico.
Furthering the good neighbor
policy, an article entitled "Mex
Pub Board Meets Today
To Select Awgwan Staff
All students who filed for
staff positions on the Awgwan
will go before the Publications
Board today at 4 p. m., as the
Board did not meet Wednes
day. The board meets in room
104 of University hall and will
select the permanent staff of
the humor magazine.
ico and Her Industrial Develop
ment," by Evert L. Stancliff, '13,
senior economic analyst, depart
ment of state, is included in the
Alumnus. The article embodies
Mexico's plans for a "program
of sound economic development,'
the effects of the war and the
American-Mexican commission.
The magazine also contains a
list of alumni in service, a roll
of honor for servicemen and a
section devoted to news from for
mer university students.
Fraternity Dance
Heads Weekend
Union Activities
With the fraternity spring ball
Friday night as the leading event
scheduled at the Union this week
end, other activities will be the
free orchestra dance Saturday
night, matinee dance this after
noon and the varety hour.
Two hours of dancing to the
juke box from 4 to 6 this after
noon in the ballroom will take
the spring fever from coeds and
men who attend the free dance,
Phillips Plays
Saturday night's free orchestra
dance with Jimmy Phillips lead
ing his band from 9 to 12 in the
ballroom will end Union dancing
for the week-end.
Teaming up with Ginger Rogers
and Fred Astaire Sunday after
noon at 3 in the ballroom will be
Lorraine Woita and Cecil Smith
Playing the accordian and piano,
Miss Woita and Smith will enter
tain, while Astaire and Rogers
appear in the show "Carefree." In
addition, a cartoon will be shown.
"Carefree is a parody on the an
cient theme of Miles Standish,
Priscilla Mullen, and John Alden.
With Peg Shelley at the piano
in the lounge from 5 to 6 Sunday
afternoon, students can enjoy the
coffee and doughnut hour given
by the Union.
MATINEE
DANCES
5 to 6, WED., MAR. 21
4 to 6, FRI., MAR. 23
and
Sat., Mar. 24
Jimmie Phillips'
Band
Ploying 9 to 12
UNION
BALLROOM
Admission:
Your Ident. Card
CI
I
IS N
r w W a r4
fx t ? f i "V i -
Friday,
Much ZSrt
UNI. NEBR. COLISEUM c;;j?.Ti
FINAL
LOW
PRICED
647
AVAI LA
Sa Hi
Seats in which yon can SEE and IIEAR the Opera
well. The price asked for these seats Is far below
what yon would pay for similar se to see an
Opera in larrer cities.
While They ST120
Last 11
Tt4. Ts lad.
Just a few seats available at 11.80 Fed. Tax IneL
Remaining TICKETS ON SALE at
Latch Brothers 1124 0 St.
SPONSORED BY
Uhi TanUr Chamber f Camatcrec ai4 Tb t-fneala Newipaaen.
Aar rraflt Darl4 Will B DanaUa la WarUiwaUa Clrla Enteraraaaa.
TRACKING DOWN
TROUBLE
This laboratory, ready to move anywhere on short
notice, runs down "crimes' against good tele
phone service. Finding these threats is one of the
many jobs of the Bell Telephone Laboratories'
scientists.
The "318" are such tilings as threads of
lint, traces of acids, or sulphur compounds in the
air-any of which might damage telephone equip,
ment.
In their interesting war work Bell Laboratories
scientists have been on a new kind of hunt They
have tracked down different materials for those
now hard to get, found others that would serve in
special conditions, and have detected in captured
equipment the kinds of material the enemy uses.
These are some examples among many of the
vays Bell System research is helping to serve
America at war.
BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM
'Service to the Nation in Peace and War"